Site Offers To Spoil 'Game Of Thrones' For Just $1 Per Text

Trending News: Want To Get Back At Your Ex? Spoil 'GoT' For Her With This App

Why Is This Important?

Because George R. R Martin himself couldn’t think of a crueler way to get back at your Game of Thrones-addicted friends.

Long Story Short

For $0.99, a website will send an anonymous spoiler text telling a friend (or enemy) or your choice what’s going to happen in the next episode of HBO’s Game of Thrones.

Long Story

Are you bored of all your friends constantly discussing Game of Thrones? There’s a new, drastic way to get some George R. R Martin style revenge.

A website called Spoiled.io is offering to send an automatic, anonymous text spoiler straight to a friend’s phone telling them what’s going to happen in the next episode of Game of Thrones for just $0.99 per victim.

spoiled.io

The plan will only work if the friend in question doesn’t watch it live, but however dedicated they are to GoT, they surely have other things in their life and will slip up sometime.

Spoiled’s intro says: “Do your friends love Game of Thrones, but watch it after it airs? Are you a terrible friend? Great! For just $0.99, Spoiled will anonymously and ruthlessly text spoilers to your unsuspecting friends after each new episode airs.”

The site’s Twitter page posts the responses so you can sit in a darkened room and cackle manically at your dastardly scheme’s success.

The warped minds who conjured up this idea have explained that the concept came from a Reddit thread where a woman get revenge on her cheating ex-boyfriend by sending a Game of Thrones spoiler every Monday.

HBO

If you want to prank an unsuspecting friend then you will have to act fast as the GoT Season 6 finale is coming this weekend.

Own The Conversation

Ask The Big Question

Is it funny to send a Game of Thrones spoiler text or is that too cruel?

Disrupt Your Feed

Sending a Game of Thrones spoiler is pretty much the real-life equivalent of the Red Wedding. If your friend ever finds out you can expect a terrible vengeance.

Drop This Fact

A study at VU University Amsterdam found that stories that had been ‘spoiled’ were rated as less thought provoking, less moving and less immersive than those read by participants who hadn’t received a spoiler summary.